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- Apr 19, 2021
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And the latest version still supports 32-bit Windows 7.Irfanview is pretty good if you want something autistic.
It should be said that it needs some setting up at first. I use it, it's the best, but it should be set up to act and behave the way you expect it to. Don't let it play video, then download the plugin pack that supports webp and weird characters. It's a very nice image viewer because it's got so many options in it, it's also got so many options for converting from one format to the other, cropping, rotating, color/gamma correcting and other things as well. Sadly enough it doesn't have customizable key bindings.And the latest version still supports 32-bit Windows 7.
Easiest way to get it all installed is to just install the program and the "all plugins" package through Chocolatey.It should be said that it needs some setting up at first. I use it, it's the best, but it should be set up to act and behave the way you expect it to. Don't let it play video, then download the plugin pack that supports webp and weird characters. It's a very nice image viewer because it's got so many options in it, it's also got so many options for converting from one format to the other, cropping, rotating, color/gamma correcting and other things as well. Sadly enough it doesn't have customizable key bindings.
libredirect A web extension that redirects requests to alternative privacy friendly frontends and backends google frontends SearXNG, SearX, Whoogle, LibreX
adding it to search does not always workLibRedirect is a fucking fantastic browser extension and I wholeheartedly recommend it... but why on Earth would you use it to reroute your search queries through SearX(NG), Whoogle, or LibreX? This extension literally taught me that Hyperpipe, Invidious, BreezeWiki, Wikiless, Quetre, LibReddit, and ProxiTok exist... but you're here focusing on a feature that's bog-standard in every web browser nowadays?
Firefox
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Chromium instructions using Brave Search as an example (this works for StartPage and any other search engine too FYI)
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I know that instance redirection is a nice "to have" but really... if you're gonna be using a public SearXNG instance, you might as well just self-host your own SearX instance instead. The Docker container's easy enough to get you going if your'e not a total fucking retard and know how to read instructions verbatim and understand 100% of the text.
adding it to search does not always work
i don't think many people self host the hole point is that many poeple can use it in easy way. and what is easier then a browser add on. internet browsing is always uncertainty.That's why I said if you intend on using SearX(NG), Whoogle, or LibreX, you're better off self-hosting. MetaGer operates on a similar principle to SearX(NG) but doesn't come with the baggage and uncertainty of public-facing search engine instances. MetaGer can also be added to your browser's search without issue whatsoever either.
Have you looked at ripgrep-all? I've had a good experience with the rga-fzf integration, albeit on normal PDFs.Anybody have a recommendation for self hosted OCR for Linux, that can read through a folder of screenshots that has search functionality to point to the image?
Coming up short in this regards from my searches. Find plenty of OCR solutions for single pdfs/pictures but not seeing anything with a database functionality for multiple OCR'd images.
That works pretty dang well. Have to enable the tesseract flag on it. Will help a lot finding certain screenshots. Much thanks!Have you looked at ripgrep-all? I've had a good experience with the rga-fzf integration, albeit on normal PDFs.
https://github.com/phiresky/ripgrep-all
Google had to pay billions out for fraudulent clicks.So I'm a dipshit boomer, I guess, but what's the point of AdNausium?
Like, isn't clicking ads *rewarding* shit advertising? And how does adding more data to a pile obfuscate something more than just not giving any data at all?
I knew the name AdNauseam, but I knew nothing about it and had always assumed it was just another regular ad blocker, and I already had one of those, so I never thought about switching, but after reading this article I have installed AdNauseam.Google had to pay billions out for fraudulent clicks.
>Multiply that by 216,000, and you’re looking at $13,608,000 each day.![]()
Is The AdNauseam Extension Still Losing Marketers Billions?
The Ad Nauseam extension is a free ad blocker for web browsers that also clicks on ads. By carrying out click spam how much does it cost marketers?www.clickcease.com
Information is a ratio of specificity vs noise in data. Advertisers aren't interested in your data, they're interested in the information the data carries. You can't have Facebook un-buy your credit history or Google un-collect your browsing history. You can mess with that noise ratio though by increasing the amount of junk data. AdNauseum is about making your data contain less information which makes it worth less to advertisers.So I'm a dipshit boomer, I guess, but what's the point of AdNausium?
Like, isn't clicking ads *rewarding* shit advertising? And how does adding more data to a pile obfuscate something more than just not giving any data at all?
Also when they misrepresent the worth of the ad spot, it opens them up to hugely expensive litigation.The direct result of tampering with the information ratios is that a single ad spot is worth less to the platform serving the ad. If you ever step outside of ad-block-land you'll notice that internet advertising has gotten more and more aggressive.